Berserk,
Thank you for your excellent response to the issues I raised in the thread on channeling. I will respond to some of your points in that thread tomorrow. For now, I want to start a new thread to talk more about the question of reincarnation.
Quote:I reject reincarnation for many evidential reasons, but I remain open to the possibility of being wrong on this point.
I would like to know, what evidence are you talking about? How could there be any evidence proving that reincarnation is false, unless you mean direct revelation from God stating this to be the case? I have never found any statements in the Bible that directly rule out reincarnation. (The few verses Christians often point to I have found very unconvincing.)
I see the Bible as being mostly silent on the issue. The Elijah/John the Baptist connection
could be interpreted as reincarnation, but not necessarily. I have a feeling that many Christians object to reincarnation not so much because there is any Biblical or other evidence refuting it, but simply because the concept is associated with Hinduism, Gnosticism, and New Age spirituality, all of which contain some seriously erroneous viewpoints. Thus, reincarnation is condemned by association.
The problem is, there are several logical reasons why reincarnation would make sense. One is the problem of aborted fetuses, stillborn babies, and babies who die in infancy. Their lives are so short that they really have no chance to do anything on earth, so it would make sense for them to get another shot to learn the valuable lessons of earth-life by means of reincarnation.
Another reason for reincarnation is that it could be a method God uses to redeem souls and enable them to enter heaven -- a purgatorial process, where if one life is not enough, another life is granted until the soul is perfected enough to "graduate" from the earth plane.
I do not accept the karmic view of reincarnation. If reincarnation is true, I see it only as a means of purging, purifying, and perfecting the soul, not the karmic model most often assumed to be the reason for reincarnation.
If God does not send the wicked back to another life on earth, how can they ever learn the lessons earth has to offer well enough to enter heaven? Presumably if you "flunk out" of earth one time, you'd have to go there again until you "pass." The other alternative is eternal damnation -- that some souls will never be able to enter heaven because they didn't do well enough on earth. Or, perhaps souls could be perfected in some other plane of existence -- but why not earth? What is so
verboten about the notion of God sending a soul to the earth plane more than once, if that would benefit the soul's progression towards heaven?
Quote:Would you be willing to consult relevant posts on Robert Bruce's website "Astralpulse.com" under the topical section "Judaism and Early Christianity?" A moderator (Beth) created a post that defends your viewpoint in detail ("Reincarnation in Judaism and Christianity"). I rebut all her historical claims in a post (by "Berserk") entitled "Reincarnation in the Bible and the Early Church?" I argue that reincarnation cannot be found in the Bible, the Palestinian Judaism of late antiquity, or the early church (aoart from 2nd century Gnosticism).
After several months, neither Beth nor her supporters have challenged any of my points. So I'd appreciate your feedback.
Thanks for directing me to these articles. I went to that forum and read through the two threads you mentioned, yours and Beth's, but I will have to read them again more carefully.
My initial reaction is as follows: I neither agree with Beth that reincarnation is an explicit teaching of the Bible and/or the early Christian church, nor do I agree with you that it is antithetical to these sources of spiritual wisdom. It seems to me that the issue just was not settled. Some Christians probably believed in it and others didn't, and the Bible seems not to discuss it at all, except a few verses possibly promoting it and a few verses possibly rejecting it.
Certainly the most common belief among the Jews at the time was resurrection of the physical flesh. But there was also a common belief in a non-physical soul that survives death. The New Testament can be interpreted as promoting either view, or possibly both. Today, there are some Christian denominations that teach only physical resurrection and no afterlife for the soul alone, and there are other denominations that teach that the soul immediately goes to heaven upon death of the body.
The point is, the issue of exactly what happens after death has always been an open question in Christianity. The possibilty of reincarnation remains also in the mix because of some Bible verses about Elijah and John the Baptist and speculations about Jesus being the return of Old Testament prophets.
I want to comment briefly on why in my own mind the Elijah/John the Baptist issue is so significant. The traditional Christian view, which you explained so well in your posts on the Astralpulse forum, leaves open some really heretical possibilities about the return of Christ. Allow me to explain.
In Malachi, it says Elijah must return before Messiah comes. In two Gospels (Matthew and Mark), Jesus identifies John the Baptist as Elijah, and therefore the OT prophecy has been fulfilled. Most Christians argue that the statement in Luke that John the Baptist comes "in the spirit and power of Elijah" means it is something short of reincarnation; it is only the return of certain characteristics, not the soul. But here's the problem --
and boy is it a BIG problem! If Elijah can come back as another person, and this is not actual reincarnation but just another person with similar characteristics, and this is good enough to fulfill prophecy, then
why can't Jesus do the same? Could Jesus Christ return as some new guy, a totally new person, and not even be the reincarnation of the historical Jesus? Could the Return of Christ prophesied in the NT be legitimately fulfilled by a
totally different person with a different soul -- not even the same soul as Jesus -- but who shares characteristics with Jesus?
The fact is, if Christians accept the idea that John the Baptist is the legitimate, prophetically designated return of Elijah
required by the Book of Malachi in order for Jesus to be the true Messiah -- even though John the Baptist is not even the reincarnation of Elijah's soul -- then there is no logical reason whatsoever to reject the idea of Jesus Christ returning as some new guy with a totally different soul, who has some "christlike" characteristics.
Guess what? There is a whole religion founded on this argument. It's called the Baha'i faith. In the 1800's a Persian Shi'ite Muslim spiritual leader named Mirza Husayn Ali Nuri declared himself "Baha'u'llah" (the Glory of God) and claimed to be the return of Christ, the return of the 12th Imam of the Shi'ite mystical tradition, the Shah Bahram of Zoroastrianism, the Maitreya Buddha, and just about every other prophetic figure expected by various religions. He made this claim based on the idea that he came in their spirit and power, with their characteristics -- not reincarnation or anything more substantive. His religion spread into the West and has gotten about 6 million followers worldwide. Several prominent liberal Christian ministers in Europe and America converted to the Baha'i faith in the early 1900's. Guess what one of the main arguments was that Baha'u'llah used for his claim to be the return of Christ prophesied in the Bible, and which the Christian ministers embraced, and which Baha'is today use in their efforts to convert Christians? It is the argument that "If John the Baptist could be the return of Elijah, then Baha'u'llah can be the return of Christ. And Christ himself laid down this principle of prophetic return in the Bible."
I think it's very dangerous to accept such a loose view of prophetic fulfillment, that a whole new man can be the fulfillment of a prophecy of the return of a past prophet, and he doesn't even have to have the same soul. New body, new soul, totally new person -- but somehow the return of a prophet which is required by scripture? I don't think so. It leaves the door
wide open for false prophets and false christs.
At least if reincarnation is required in order for a prophet to return, a case could be made that he could come in a new physical body if God doesn't want him appearing on earth in his spirit-body. But if not even the soul has to be the same, then in what way was the Elijah prophecy in Malachi fulfilled, in any way that is not a total stretch of scripture which Jews have an excellent argument for rejecting and therefore choosing not to accept the Messiahship of Jesus? JMHO.
Freebird